Qualified Finance Function & Oversight
Assessing whether the organization has a finance function (in-house or outsourced) with appropriate qualifications, experience, and governance oversight, it ensures that staff or providers possess the necessary competence for financial management, compliance (including fraud and data protection), and strategic planning, supported by active board-level financial expertise. This reflects the Islamic principle of kafa'ah (competence) and the maqasid objective of hifz al-mal (preservation of wealth), ensuring institutional resources are diligently safeguarded as a sacred amanah (trust).
| Metric | Finance Capability & Control Effectiveness Index |
|---|---|
| Target | >80% Composite Score |
| Frequency | Monthly (Ops) / Annual (Capability) |
| Method | Weighted score: Qualifications coverage (15%); CPD completion (10%); Month-end close on-time (20%); Reconciliations within SLA (15%); Payroll accuracy (10%); Audit findings closed (10%); Outsourcing KPI performance (20%) |
| Unit | Index Score |
Level 1: Initial/Ad-hoc
Financial tasks are performed by staff or volunteers who may lack formal financial qualifications. No formal oversight of outsourced functions exists. Roles are informally defined.
Level 2: Developing
Job descriptions exist with basic qualification requirements. Verification of qualifications and HMRC Fit & Proper declarations are completed. Trustees receive basic reports but lack deep oversight.
Level 3: Established
The organization has a defined finance function (in-house or outsourced) meeting role-based competency standards. Documented Segregation of Duties (SoD) exists. Month-end close timetable is defined. SLAs exist for any outsourced work.
Level 4: Advanced
Finance team includes advanced professional qualifications (e.g., ACCA, CIMA). Monthly KPI dashboard is reviewed. Audit actions are closed on time. A trustee with relevant finance expertise sits on the Finance/Audit Committee.
Level 5: Optimizing
Finance function is highly qualified and leads in strategy and risk management. Annual SoD testing and external effectiveness reviews occur. Succession planning is in place. The team benchmarks against sector best practices.
Organisation Types
By Organisation Size
| Size | Applicability | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Micro | exempt | Disproportionate for volunteer-run charities with under £10k income; formal accounting qualifications and finance departments are not expected. |
| Small | partial | In-house qualified FD is disproportionate; relies on external accountants for year-end oversight and basic competence for day-to-day bookkeeping. |
| Medium | partial | May outsource qualified FD oversight rather than employing in-house; AAT level for finance officers and access to specialist support applies. |
| Large | full | Fully applicable; requires dedicated qualified finance leadership and a structured finance department. |
| Major | full | Fully applicable; essential for managing complex finances, trading subsidiaries, and large-scale operations. |
Applicable When
- Organization is legally constituted.
- Finance is fully or partially outsourced—criterion applies to (a) trustee/management oversight competence, (b) supplier governance (SLA/KPIs), (c) sign-off responsibilities, and (d) internal controls retained by the charity.
Not Applicable When
- The organization is in a pre-operational or dormant state with minimal transactions AND trustees perform basic bookkeeping with documented controls.
Discussion (1)
📋 **Version updated: 1.0.0 → 2.9.7** **Changes:** Updated islamic_references from mizan-297.json
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